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soldiers. At 16 years old, at her parents urging, she complied and married a young officer. Sixteen days after her wedding, her husband was killed in a battle with raiding Arabs. She again married, this time to a deeply religious man who wished to become a monk and left to do so with her blessing.
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St. Athanasia was the daughter of
Christian nobles, Niketas and Irene, and experienced the mystical union of a star merging with her heart while weaving at the loom when she was a young girl. She wanted a spiritual life, but an imperial edict required all single women of marriageable age to marry
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in a cell for seven years. While walled away, she was an adviser to the
Empress Theodora II. After seven years, she returned to Aegina where she died of natural causes three days later at Timia on 14 August 860.
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of 916 CE. The author is unknown. However, scholars believe it was most likely a man, due to the masculine tenses found in the piece, and that it was written soon after St. Athanasia's death.
162:, under the term "Atsinganoi" (Greek), dates from the Byzantine era during a time of famine in the 9th century. In 800 CE, St. Athanasia gave food to "foreigners called the Atsinganoi" near
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a multimedia organization specializing in the production of audio and video programs faithful to the teachings of the Roman
Catholic Church. Accessed August 2008.
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and was known for her miraculous healing of the sick and those seen as possessed. Her community later moved to Timia near the ancient church of
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St. Athanasia then gave away the bulk of her possessions, converted their home into a convent, and began building churches. She served as an
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Edited by
Elizabeth Mary Talbot, Published by Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection, (1996) Washington, D.C.
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She served as an abbess and was known for her miraculous healing of the sick and those seen as possessed.
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Contemporary scholars have suggested that one of the first written references to the
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Holy Women of
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Women of Bible lands : a pilgrimage to compassion and wisdom
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Her relics are preserved at Timia in a specially made
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111:The life of St. Athanasia is contained only in a
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176:Saint Athanasia of Aegina, patron saint archive
255:University of Kentucky. Accessed August 2008.
96:and was for a while adviser to the Empress
217:. Collegeville, Minn.: Liturgical Press.
199:Ἡ Ὁσία Ἀθανασία ἡ Θαυματουργός ἐξ Αἰγίνης
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203:18 Απριλίου. ΜΕΓΑΣ ΣΥΝΑΞΑΡΙΣΤΗΣ.
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88:– 14 August 860 in Timia,
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213:Kirk, Martha Ann (2004).
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138:seeking solitude as an
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84:(c.790 in
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140:anchoress
50:, Greece)
32:circa 790
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128:abbess
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58:shrine
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